Our Media Inquiry will be asking these questions and looking at how the lessons of Iraq will affect the reporting of future conflicts.

In this special event we will be hearing from key “witnesses” from the world of journalism to find out what happened in newsrooms and if there are lessons to be learnt for the future.

Just like the Chilcot inquiry, this isn’t a trial. But we would like some answers.

Moderator: Paddy O’Connell, presenter of Broadcasting House

Participants: Nick Davies, author of Flat Earth News, in which he examined falsehood and distortion in the media; Patrick Cockburn, Middle East correspondent for the Independent, who has reported extensively on Iraq, and journalist and author David Rose; Kevin Marsh, editor of the BBC College of Journalism and former editor of BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

Britain’s spies tried to block intelligence from reaching Tony Blair, following publication of the “dodgy dossier” in the run-up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq, according to a forthcoming book. A former senior intelligence officer, who worked with the then prime minister, said officials did not think “raw” intelligence was “good for him”, because Mr Blair was not interested in any information “unless it conformed with his world view”.

The book, Spying on the World, is a history of the Joint Intelligence Committee (JIC), which advises the Government on the most secret state affairs. It is based on 20 case studies by three academics.

It says: “With the spectre of Iraq hanging heavily, the JIC found it difficult to engage the Prime Minister in its work. Even before the WMD [weapons of mass destruction] ﬁasco, Blair‘s informal “sofa government” style posed a problem for the 21st-century JIC.

“His Chief of Staff, Jonathan Powell, has since dismissed the committee as producing ‘lowest-common-denominator-type reports, hedging their bets and failing to give a clear steer in any direction’. Accordingly, some policy-makers sought to bypass the JIC altogether and receive more raw intelligence. Unsurprisingly, the JIC learnt different lessons from the Butler review [the 2004 report into intelligence failings over Iraq]. It was keen to limit Blair’s access to this raw material.”

The latter statement is cited in the book simply as “private information”, but Dr Rory Cormac, one of its authors, said it came from “a senior former intelligence officer … an insider who worked with Blair“.

“At one point the intelligence community was refusing to give him certain bits of intelligence because they knew he would use and abuse it,” Dr Cormac said. “I think trust broke down a little bit.” He said he was unsure whether this specific information was presented to the Chilcot inquiry, which examined how, prior to the Iraq conflict, decisions were made and actions taken. He said, however, it was a “theme that people talked about” within the intelligence world in general.

Mr Blair has been heavily criticised over his foreword to the now infamous dossier, which spelled out the dangers of Saddam Hussein’s supposed weapons of mass destruction in support of the need to take military action. The intelligence used in it had been stripped of its caveats but Mr Blair presented it as an authoritative account. “His weapons of mass destruction programme is active, detailed and growing. The policy of containment is not working,” he wrote.

Mr Blair has continued to defend the invasion of Iraq, despite the failure to discover any WMD, saying it was worthwhile in order to oust a brutal dictator.

Dr Cormac, of Nottingham University, said the way Mr Blair used intelligence regarding Iraq led to “tension” between the prime minister and the JIC, which then began to “fight back”.

But he said David Cameron had adopted a different approach since taking office, and was at pains to “make the Joint Intelligence Committee feel a little bit more loved”.

Dr Michael Goodman, of King’s College London, is a co-author of Spying on the World and the official JIC historian. He said such breakdowns in communication were rare, and the only other example he could think of concerned Winston Churchill during the Second World War: “Churchill was known for wanting to receive raw intelligence. I think they [the intelligence services] were keen for him to only received assessed intelligence.”

Last year it emerged that, on the eve of the 2003 invasion, two senior Iraqi politicians told Western intelligence that Iraq had no weapons of mass destruction, but their account was dismissed as propaganda.

Requests to the office of Tony Blair for comment on the claims went unanswered. A spokeswoman for the Cabinet Office, which handles media relations for the Chilcot inquiry, also declined to comment.

It is incredible MI6, would be taken in by credentials such as the “dodgy dossier”, not only MI6, would be up to knowing what is going on as much or as little as Blair, knows, MI6, and the rest of security would know exactly what is going on in places such as Iraq, they are all part of the same game, such as the transporting of military hardware, would be known to this organization, the only plausible and yet ambivalent reason MI6, to announce this claim, is because of reasons unknown to the general public, such as distancing themselves from a person who has little integrity and is now on the outer with the public.

And Obama’s drop in on Afghanistan, stating this country will not rise up again against America, Afghanistan having been punished for the Twin Towers, saga, even if they came from this country, to start a war for what is a civil crime is incredible, significantly a big time investor from America now investing in Russia, are all signs America is crumbling, owing to this counties fall from grace beginning with Vietnam, and their over seas policies since, of military escapades cannot be forgotten, many who have not been indoctrinated, will welcome the collapse of America.